Small Wars Journal

USIP Publication: 2020 Trends in Terrorism: From ISIS Fragmentation to Lone-Actor Attacks

Fri, 01/15/2021 - 7:58pm

The Global Terrorism Index points to the need for better data and local insights to inform policy to counter extremism.

By Alastair Reed and Kateira Aryaeinejad

In the past five years, terrorist attacks have declined notably around the globe. While this is certainly good news—particularly in the 20th year of the so-called global war on terror—terrorism remains a pervasive threat. Despite declines in its prevalence, the scale of the challenge posed by terrorism and the violent ideologies that underpin it is still immense and the mechanisms by which to address it remain complex and in need of further coordination on a global scale. What trends did we see in 2020? And how can those trends inform policy to counter violent extremism?

In November 2020, the Institute of Economics and Peace released their annual Global Terrorism Index (GTI), an invaluable resource for understanding the current impact of terrorism around the world. On a subject that provokes much speculation and conjecture, the GTI provides hard empirical data illuminating the actual scale and impact of terrorism worldwide with important implications for identifying ongoing and future terrorism trends, tolls, and threats. The GTI data highlights two key patterns of particular note for informing more proactive and effective policy: the decline and displacement of the Islamic State group in the Middle East and the rise of far-right violence in the West.

 

Full Article: https://www.usip.org/publications/2021/01/2020-trends-terrorism-isis-fragmentation-lone-actor-attacks

War on the Rocks: What's in a Name? Reimagining Irregular Warface Activities for Competition

Fri, 01/15/2021 - 5:23pm

By Kevin Bilms

For better or worse, terminology plays a major role in shaping mental models and driving debate. Military operations and the world around them rarely confirm to doctrinal definitions and many recent and ongoing missions have had flavors of multiple mission sets (Syria, Afghanistan, etc.).

Full article: https://warontherocks.com/2021/01/whats-in-a-name-reimagining-irregular-warfare-activities-for-competition/

SOCOM Core Activities: https://www.socom.mil/about/core-activities

01/15/2021 News & Commentary – National Security

Fri, 01/15/2021 - 10:12am

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Daniel Riggs.

1. Defend, dominate, deny: Declassified U.S. strategy shows vision for Indo-Pacific

2.What’s in a Name? Reimagining Irregular Warfare Activities for Competition

3. Appeasing China, New Zealand abandons the Five Eyes

4. Trump Orders U.S. Military Reorganization Favored by Pro-Israel Groups

5. America’s Far Right Isn’t Authoritarian. It’s Anti-Statist.

6. No Place in DOD for Extremism, White Supremacy, Officials Say

7. MIT Professor Who Received $19M in Federal Grants Arrested for Concealing Ties to China

8. Millions Flock to Telegram and Signal as Fears Grow Over Big Tech

9. Opinion | Biden Must Retire the Illogical Great Power Competition Paradigm

10. Norquist to serve as acting defense secretary; acting service secretaries named

11. Why the alt-right believes another American Revolution is coming

12. Court orders arrest of Maria Ressa, Rambo Talabong over Benilde thesis story

13. New China defense law could "justify" PLA action against U.S.- think tank

14.  If You Want Peace, Study War

15.  China’s Quiet Play For Latin America

 

1. Defend, dominate, deny: Declassified U.S. strategy shows vision for Indo-Pacific

japantimes.co.jp · by Jesse Johnson · January 13, 2021

A summary of the recently declassified Inod-Pacific strategy.  The question is what part of this strategy will transcend the transition of administrations?

 

2. What’s in a Name? Reimagining Irregular Warfare Activities for Competition

warontherocks.com · by Kevin Bilms · January 15, 2021

An important contribution to the debate on terminology and definitions.  The question is will Kevin's proposals help clean up the proliferation of terms?  Every term has baggage and people who are wedded to those terms (e.g., I would never do away with unconventional warfare)

 

3. Appeasing China, New Zealand abandons the Five Eyes

Washington Examiner · by Tom Rogan · January 11, 2021

Of course, the title caught my eye (one of my two eyes and not my five eyes:-))

But this appears to be hyperbole - the "abandonment" is that New Zealand did not stand with the other four in condemning China over Hong Kong (and Rogan provides other "offenses").  I have not heard of any reporting saying the New ealand has actually left the Five Eyes construct.

Conclusion:

“The bottom line: New Zealand has fed the rising perception in Washington that while its intelligence services remain staffed by talented patriots and allies, its government can no longer be trusted to safeguard the most sensitive American intelligence. The U.S. has also noticed the argument by influential New Zealanders that their government should now act as intermediary between the U.S. and China rather than an ally to the former.

Put simply, New Zealand's silence on Hong Kong is a symptom of a much deeper and more worrisome problem.”

 

4. Trump Orders U.S. Military Reorganization Favored by Pro-Israel Groups

WSJ · by Michael R. Gordon and Gordon Lubold

As General Zinni says this is probably the right time to do this.

 

5. America’s Far Right Isn’t Authoritarian. It’s Anti-Statist.

defenseone.com · by Christine German and Michael A. Hunzeker

An important essay.  This is what I see on my social media feeds from many of my friends who are Trump supporters. Anti-statist is probably the best description. And there is the belief that the existential threat to America comes from the left.  I believe this is what really animates them.

 

6. No Place in DOD for Extremism, White Supremacy, Officials Say

defense.gov · by Jim Garamone

Excerpt:

"We ... are doing everything we can to eliminate extremism in the Department of Defense," Gary Reed, the director for defense intelligence and counterintelligence, law enforcement and security, said. "DOD policy expressly prohibits military personnel from actively advocating supremacist, extremist or criminal gang doctrine, ideology or causes."

 

7. MIT Professor Who Received $19M in Federal Grants Arrested for Concealing Ties to China

National Review Online · by Brittany Bernstein · January 14, 2021

Excerpts:

“Chen allegedly received roughly $29 million in foreign funding since 2013, including the funds from SUSTech.

MIT spokeswoman Kimberly Allen said in a statement to the Daily Caller that the university is “deeply distressed” over Chen’s arrest.

“MIT believes the integrity of research is a fundamental responsibility, and we take seriously concerns about improper influence in U.S. research,” Allen said. “Prof. Chen is a long-serving and highly respected member of the research community, which makes the government’s allegations against him all the more distressing.”

 

8. Millions Flock to Telegram and Signal as Fears Grow Over Big Tech

The New York Times · by Jack Nicas, Mike Isaac and Sheera Frenkel · January 13, 2021

Growing  counterintelligence challenges.

 

9. Opinion | Biden Must Retire the Illogical Great Power Competition Paradigm

commondreams.org · by Sharon Squassoni · January 13, 2021

There is more to great power competition than a nuclear arms race.

Excerpts:

“A big reason to retire the great power competition paradigm is its utter illogic when it comes to nuclear weapons. There is no winning a nuclear arms race and no winning a nuclear war. The use of any nuclear weapon in conflict is a loss for humanity. In the nuclear weapons realm, stability, not dominance, is the name of the game. In that realm, the United States, Russia, and China have a lot more to gain by cooperation than confrontation, and cooperation is all but impossible within a great power competition paradigm.

Take, for example, the conduct of nuclear arms control during the Trump administration. Arms control is the traditional sphere of cooperation when it comes to nuclear weapons. The United States repeatedly insisted that China be part of any deal to extend New START, even though China is not party to the treaty and has a far smaller nuclear arsenal than Russia or the United States. As Fu Cong, China’s director general for arms control, explained for a global audience in November, “Arms control that aims at increasing one’s own security, at the expense of the security of others, is neither acceptable nor sustainable” (Fu 2020). Fu then directly criticized the US for playing a zero-sum game. Predictably, China was not convinced to engage in arms control that only carried costs and no benefits for it.”

 

10. Norquist to serve as acting defense secretary; acting service secretaries named

Defense News · by Aaron Mehta · January 14, 2021

 

11. Why the alt-right believes another American Revolution is coming

theconversation.com · by Clare Corbould

Our Constitution was designed with the checks and balances and separation of powers (both at the federal level as well as among the federal, state, and local governments). The question is has our Constitution failed?  If we support and defend it shouldn't our efforts be focused on making it work through the political system and processes that it established? Can violence, insurrection, and civil war support and defend our constitution? What is the end state for defending the Constitution through  employment of violent ways and means? 
 

I would really like to know the strategy of those who are advocating another revolution.  I know they fear socialism from the radical left and the radical poses an existential threat in their minds.  But don't we have sufficient political processes to protect against those radical ideologies?  How does their strategy play out?  How does violence insurrection and revolution support and defend the Constitution that so many profess to believe in?

 

12. Court orders arrest of Maria Ressa, Rambo Talabong over Benilde thesis story

rappler.com

The current Philippines regime is one the biggest threats to freedom of the press.  Maria Ressa continues to fight the good fight.  She deserves the support of the international community and freedom loving people of the Philippines.

 

13. New China defense law could "justify" PLA action against U.S.- think tank

Newsweek · by John Feng · January 13, 2021

Lawfare.

 

14. If You Want Peace, Study War

persuasion.community · by Margaret MacMillan

I am reminded of Edwin Starr:

“(War, huh) Yeah!

(What is it good for?) Absolutely nothing, uhuh”

Excerpts:

“I would not suggest that student preference should determine what departments offer. But they should at least be listened to. Much more important is what we, as societies, want our future leaders to know. Political history, diplomatic history and the study of war—they all offer critical warnings and instructive analogies to our times. Social and cultural histories, and history from the bottom up, add to our understanding too. But we need balance, and a sense of how the micro- and macro-histories mesh with each other.

Do we really want citizens who have so little knowledge of how war helped to shape our values and societies and our world? Do we ever want another president asking, as Donald Trump did during a visit to the Pearl Harbor memorial: “What’s this all about? What’s this a tour of?”

If we aren’t aware of how wars happen, we may fail to recognize warning signs when the next conflict brews, as it will.”

 

15. China’s Quiet Play For Latin America

noemamag.com · by Margaret Myers

Excerpts:

“However, the Trump administration’s heavy-handed, China-centric approach to regional policy may have unintentionally boosted Beijing’s image in Latin America. The Pew Research Center has noted that views of China in the region shifted from negative to mostly positive following Trump’s election in 2016, and have increased every year thereafter.

Trump’s punitive foreign policy and isolationist trade agenda also alienated critical U.S. allies in the region, including Latin American members of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which Trump withdrew from on his first day in office. Other aggressive moves — such as the nomination of Mauricio Claver-Carone, an American, to head the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), which violated a long-standing agreement among IDB members that Latin Americans should lead the bank — reinforced the notion of a hegemonic U.S., making China’s claim of “non-interference” that much more appealing.

Now that Trump’s time in office is ending, China’s efforts to shape its image in Latin America will be made more difficult. Assuming Biden employs a more cooperative and moralistic approach to hemispheric affairs, China will be judged, as it often was before Trump, on its own merits rather than in comparison to Trump’s domestic and foreign policy, both of which have largely dismissed existential challenges to hemispheric wellbeing, including in the areas of global health and climate change.”

 

-------------

 

"In the “strategic equation” of war there are “four factors — combat, economic, political, and psychologic - and that the last of these is coequal with the others.”

- U.S. Army General Staff, April 1918

 

"A well-organized intelligence service ... publishes estimates of the military, economic, political, and psychological status of [active and potential enemies, allies, and neutrals]."

- Alexander E. Powell, The Army Behind the Army, 1919

 

With absolutely no apologies to Leon Trotsky: America may not be interested in irregular, unconventional, and political warfare but they are being practiced around the world by those who are interested in them - namely the revisionist, rogue, and revolutionary powers and violent extremist organizations.

01/15/2021 News & Commentary – Korea

Fri, 01/15/2021 - 10:10am

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Daniel Riggs.

1. N. Korea holds military parade, showcases new SLBM

2. Seoul's top nuke envoy holds phone talks with Biegun after N.K. party congress

3. New virus cases in 500s for 4th day in sign of downturn in infections (South Korea)

4. Kim Jong Un Unveils New Submarine Missile Threat as Trump Exits

5. Chinese Military Expert Claims Taekwondo Is Chinese Because China Invented Korea

6. N.K. signals room for improvement in inter-Korean relations at party congress: ministry

7. North Korea Is the Top Threat for 2021, Finds CFR Survey

8. North Korea No Longer Poses a Threat, So Says Trump Administration

9. South Korea's Moon Lays Out Agenda for the Remainder of His Term

10. North Korea's foreign propaganda set to play a more important role

11.HRW: North Korea used COVID-19 restrictions to step up control

12. Biden's pick for Asia policy likely to seek stronger regional alliances to check China

 

1. N. Korea holds military parade, showcases new SLBM

en.yna.co.kr · by 이원주 · January 15, 2021

The buried lede is Kim Yo-jong is wearing a matching leather coat with her brother (but not a furry hat).

Although we should be skeptical, but showing us the new SLBM may be an indicator that a test is coming to welcome the new Biden Administration. But as I wrote yesterday, because of COVID and the inability to conduct meetings (whether a summit or working level talks), Kim may refrain from raising tensions or conducting a test or a provocation because he will not be able to achieve the desired effects immediately.  Then again ,KJU has conducted shaping operations over a long period of time and he could have already begun his major shaping operation to influence the new Biden administration. We are just in the middle of such an operation.

 

2. Seoul's top nuke envoy holds phone talks with Biegun after N.K. party congress

en.yna.co.kr · by 김승연 · January 15, 2021

The US Korea team keeps on working.  Biden would have done well to ask Mr. Biegun to stay on to continue to work on the Korea problem.

 

3. New virus cases in 500s for 4th day in sign of downturn in infections (South Korea)

en.yna.co.kr · by 주경돈 · January 15, 2021

The numbers are looking a little better.

But South Korea (and Asia writ large) has another upcoming holiday that could cause a rise in cases:

 

4. Kim Jong Un Unveils New Submarine Missile Threat as Trump Exits

Bloomberg · by Jeong-Ho Lee · January 15, 2021

The question is whether these are operational? Surely more testing is required.  Another question is when we will see the tests?

 

5. Chinese Military Expert Claims Taekwondo Is Chinese Because China Invented Korea

koreaboo.com · January 14, 2021

This is another reason why many Koreans do not like China.

 

6. N.K. signals room for improvement in inter-Korean relations at party congress: ministry

en.yna.co.kr · by 김덕현 · January 14, 2021

I am sorry. This seems to be delusional spin.  It really is a leap of logic after listening to all the statements from the 8th Party Congress, Kim Jong-un's speeches and capped off with Kim Yo-jong's remarks to think the north is signaling for improved north-South relations.

That said, the only signal the regime appears to be sending about improved relationships is that they can improve only on the north's terms and that requires complete appeasement by the South.  The north's statements place all the blame on the South and say that change must come from the South. Without the South capitulating to the north there is no room for improvement.  The paradox is that if the South does give in to the north's demands it will not result in an improved relationship. It will result in the regime doubling down on its political warfare strategy, long con, and blackmail diplomacy and will significantly increase the security risk to the South.

 

7. North Korea Is the Top Threat for 2021, Finds CFR Survey

cfr.org · by Matthias Matthijs

Very interesting.  

Key finding:

Likelihood: High; Impact: High

    • North Korea's further development of nuclear weapons or ballistic missile testing, precipitating heightened military tensions on the Korean Peninsula

Here is the link to the results of the survey. 

I disagree with this.  I think a disruptive cyberattack is a greater threat.

 

8. North Korea No Longer Poses a Threat, So Says Trump Administration

The National Interest · by Daniel R. DePetris · January 14, 2021

Yes, I agree there was a paucity of information about north Korea in the just declassified Indo-Pacific strategy. And I agree the articulated end state was insufficient.  However, I don't think that means the administration thinks nK no longer poses a threat.  My guess is there is likely a classified north Korean strategy that has not been declassified that provides a thorough assessment of the full range of the nK threat from nuclear to conventional to cyber to proliferation and all the asymmetric threats the regime poses.

 

9. South Korea's Moon Lays Out Agenda for the Remainder of His Term

thediplomat.com · by Troy Stangarone · January 14, 2021

Conclusion: Moon Jae-in came into office in the shadow of the Park Geun-hye impeachment, promising economic inclusion and better relations with North Korea. When he leaves office in May of 2022 much of his legacy will be shaped by how well his administration is able to manage South Korea's economic recovery from COVID-19 and set the economy up to be globally competitive in the post-pandemic period. While North Korea and economic inclusion haven't left the agenda, the pandemic will remain the priority.

 

10. North Korea's foreign propaganda set to play a more important role

northkoreatech.org · by Martyn Williams · January 14, 2021

Oh the irony.  As the ROK passses a law to limit information and influence activities that upset Kim Yo-jong and her brother in north Korea, the regime's Propaganda and Agitation department is modernizing and growing its propaganda programs.

 

11. HRW: North Korea used COVID-19 restrictions to step up control

upi.com · by Elizabeth Shim · January 14, 2021

Absolutely correct.  We saw this happening a year ago.  As bad as and as dangerous as COVID is, especially if there is an outbreak in north Korea, KJU has exploited it as an opportunity to implement tighter control over the Korean people living in the north. The only thing he fears more than the US and COVID is the Korean people.

 

12. Biden's pick for Asia policy likely to seek stronger regional alliances to check China

en.yna.co.kr · by 송상호 · January 14, 2021

Excerpts:

"The U.S. position has long been that its trilateral cooperation with Seoul and Tokyo has not been optimized due to an unsatisfactory relationship between the allies. The return of Campbell might suggest he would work to bring them closer," he added.

Campbell is known as a key architect of the Obama-era "re-balancing" policy toward the Asia-Pacific, which was aimed at keeping an increasingly assertive China in check by strengthening regional alliances, its military presence and multilateral institutions on security and economic matters.

 

-------------

 

In the "strategic equation" of war there are "four factors - combat, economic, political, and psychologic - and that the last of these is coequal with the others."

- U.S. Army General Staff, April 1918

 

"A well-organized intelligence service ... publishes estimates of the military, economic, political, and psychological status of [active and potential enemies, allies, and neutrals]."

- Alexander E. Powell, The Army Behind the Army, 1919

 

"With absolutely no apologies to Leon Trotsky: America may not be interested in irregular, unconventional, and political warfare but they are being practiced around the world by those who are interested in them - namely the revisionist, rogue, and revolutionary powers and violent extremist organizations."

 

Joint Special Operations University Publication: Iranian Proxy Groups in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen: A Principal-Agent Comparative Analysis

Thu, 01/14/2021 - 6:17pm

by Diane M. Zorri, Houman A. Sadri, and David C. Ellis

Synopsis:

Understanding how and why Iran uses proxy forces throughout the Middle East is vitally important for policymakers, military strategists, and operators. The lessons in this volume are not isolated to U.S. approaches toward Iranian use of proxies but have broader implications in great power competition. Russia and China have their own versions of proxies that also seek to compete with the U.S. short of armed conflict. Zorri, Sadri, and Ellis have provided the special operations community with a roadmap to responding to such activities when so many are struggling to find a solution.

 

Full Report: https://jsou.libguides.com/ld.php?content_id=58950053

From Trump to Biden: The Way Forward for U.S. National Security

Thu, 01/14/2021 - 1:12pm

From the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

The monograph can be accessed online here.

The monograph can be accessed in PDF here.

Edited by

David Adesnik
Senior Fellow and Director of Research

John Hannah
Senior Counselor

Foreword

By FDD Senior Management

On January 6, 2021, a mob of American rioters stormed the Capitol building in Washington, DC. The ensuing melee led to the killing of a Capitol Police officer and the death of four rioters. The episode was a national disgrace. It was an assault on Congress. It was an attempt to forcibly overturn the results of a democratic election. It was a gift to foreign enemies whose main goal is to see American power and leadership laid low, riven by internal division and chaos. And it would not have happened without the encouragement of the president of the United States, Donald Trump.

The abortive insurrection was launched just as this edited volume on Trump’s national security legacy was about to go to publication. Indeed, FDD’s scholars had the unenviable task of having completed our foreign policy assessments of the most controversial president in modern memory at the very moment the most shocking events of his presidency were unfolding.

Trump’s term in office will forever be defined by the terrible events of January 6. Nothing will change that. To a lesser extent, it will be defined by his mercurial decision-making style. Trump was a “post-policy” president who vexed allies and enemies alike. And as we can attest, he vexed think tankers, too.

Yet there are foreign policy lessons to be learned from the Trump presidency. Whether challenging the Chinese Communist Party after years of accommodation and even obsequiousness, applying maximum pressure on the regime in Iran, or forging peace between Israel and no fewer than four Arab states, there are important wins to process. And even where Trump stumbled, such as by insulting NATO allies; flattering dictators such as Kim Jong Un, Xi Jinping, and Vladimir Putin; pressuring Ukraine to advance his own re-election; attempting to help Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan avoid accountability for a massive sanctions-busting scheme; making a bad “peace” deal with the Taliban; or suddenly withdrawing troops from Syria, there are lessons to be learned. We cannot simply dismiss four years of policymaking because Trump’s legacy is now indelibly stained.

America must learn from these last four years. Given the political climate and the toxic ideologies and divisions that will persist well after Trump is gone, that will not be easy. But FDD remains committed to playing a role in the foreign policy and national security debates that are sure to come. Our hope is that those debates remain substantive and respectful and ultimately serve to defend America’s democracy. To be sure, that democracy has emerged bruised and battered after these four years, if not longer. But it still stands tall. And we have every intention of joining with our fellow Americans – Democrats, Republicans, and independents alike – in helping to keep it that way and opposing all adversaries that would threaten our nation’s constitutional order and national security.

01/14/2021 News & Commentary – National Security

Thu, 01/14/2021 - 11:07am

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Daniel Riggs.

1. A lone Black officer faced down a mob at the Capitol. Meet Eugene Goodman.

2. Why Overseas Military Bases Continue to Make Sense for the United States

3. After aborted attempt, sensitive WHO mission to study pandemic origins is on its way to China

4. Now Is a Bad Time to Weaken Civilian Control Over the Military

5. The Death of Critical Thinking in the Military? Here’s How to Fix It.

6. In the wake of the Capitol insurrection, does the US military have a QAnon 5th column in the ranks?

7. Air Force Recommends Space Command Move to Alabama

8. Colorado Politicians Vow To Fight Huntsville Choice For SPACECOM

9. National Guardsmen briefed on IED threat to Capitol

10. Why America's military leaders felt they had to take a stand

11. Pentagon’s $2 Billion Cybersecurity Project Slowed by Flaws

12. Think tank pitch to Biden: Broker a NATO bank to finance new weapons

13. The Pentagon Must Learn to Do More With Less

14. Investigators pursuing signs US Capitol riot was planned

15. Sharpening America’s "Swiss Army Knife": Lessons from the Army National Guard’s COVID-19 Response

16. Upset by veterans who stormed the Capitol, these vets decided to clean up trash the mob left on the streets of D.C.

17. The online far right is moving underground

18. How the Army's 'Robin Sage' puts Special Forces hopefuls to a final, make-or-break test in the forests of North Carolina

 

1. A lone Black officer faced down a mob at the Capitol. Meet Eugene Goodman.

The Washington Post· by Rebecca Tan · January 13, 2021

A great story about a great American.  I hope he is properly recognized.

 

2. Why Overseas Military Bases Continue to Make Sense for the United States

warontherocks.com · by Raphael Cohen · January 14, 2021

Some excellent points from Raphael Cohen.  Here is our analysis along the same lines from FDD. https://www.fdd.org/analysis/2020/12/15/defending-forward/

 

Among his many good points, this one caused me to think hard: "Finally, there is a claim that permanent stationing is unnecessarily provocative. There is a thin line, however, between provocation and deterrence. Both involve altering rivals’ perceptions and whether any given military’s actions provoke or deter often is only known in hindsight. And yet, it is hard to see why permanently stationing forces would be that much more provocative than rotating forces through a given location, particularly on a continuous basis, or building a capability for rapid global power projection. If anything the latter may even be more destabilizing, since it reduces adversary warning timelines."

When has our forward basing been "unnecessarily provocative?" What has resulted from our permanently stationed overseas forces?  Who did we provoke and more importantly how did they respond?

 

3. After aborted attempt, sensitive WHO mission to study pandemic origins is on its way to China

Science · by Kai Kupferschmidt · January 13, 2021

Will they get to conduct the research this time?

 

Excerpts: "The WHO panel’s biggest problem will be that the Chinese government carefully chooses what it gets to see, says Alexandra Phelan, a lawyer at Georgetown University who specializes in global health policy. “No matter how hard local and international scientists try,” she says, “the reality is that the Chinese leadership is in an international propaganda battle.” Yanzhong Huang, a senior fellow for global health at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York City, agrees that politics makes it “very challenging to do the work independently, transparently, and thoroughly.” But the transfer of power next week in Washington, D.C., might make things a bit easier, he adds. If President-elect Joe Biden manages to cool down the rhetoric with China, “That could create a more favorable environment for the scientists to do their work.”

 

4. Now Is a Bad Time to Weaken Civilian Control Over the Military

Foreign Policy · by Jim Golby · January 13, 2021

From one of the leading contemporary scholars on civil-military relations.

 

Conclusion: "In this environment, further politicizing the U.S. military is a real danger. Americans - especially military and political officials - must take all steps now to ensure that the uniformed military’s oath remains to the U.S. Constitution, not to a party or a leader. Events have made abundantly clear that Americans cannot take this principle for granted. Trump will leave office on Jan. 20, but broader problems in the military’s relationship to civilian society and the threat of political violence will not go away. Even if Congress ratifies Biden’s historic appointment of Austin, now is the wrong time to follow Trump’s lead by further politicizing the military."

 

5. The Death of Critical Thinking in the Military? Here’s How to Fix It.

realcleardefense.com · by Steve Ferenzi

The closure of the Army's University of Foreign Military and Cultural Studies is a big mistake.

 

6. In the wake of the Capitol insurrection, does the US military have a QAnon 5th column in the ranks?

radio.com · by Jack Murphy · January 13, 2021

I hope this is not a widespread problem in the military. It boggles my mind that any sane or critically thinking person could accept these QAnon conspiracy theories.

 

Maybe we do need political officers in the units to root out these corrosive ideologies (note that was an attempt at humor and I in no way advocate such a COA.  That said the only defense against these conspiracy theories is education and the development of critical thinking and knowledge of our Constitution and founding principles.)

 

7. Air Force Recommends Space Command Move to Alabama

defenseone.com · by Marcus Weisgerber

I guess it ain't over til it's over:  "The decision could be reversed by the incoming Biden administration. Huntsville is now the “preferred” site, based on a study conducted by Space Command, according to an Air Force official. Finalization is subject to an environmental impact study, which does not pose a serious obstacle. However, if the in-coming administration were to initiate another study and conclude that political influence tilted the decision, this would set in motion a new round of studies and assessments, causing further delays in Space Command establishing its permanent headquarters, according to the official."

 

8. Colorado Politicians Vow To Fight Huntsville Choice For SPACECOM

breakingdefense.com · by Theresa Hitchens

 

9. National Guardsmen briefed on IED threat to Capitol

Politico· January 13, 2021

This is a serious threat.  It is so difficult to believe these threats are in our capitol.

 

10. Why America's military leaders felt they had to take a stand

CNN · by  Barbara Starr

Excerpts:

“But if an order is illegal, what happens? The lawyers and the Pentagon leadership explain to the president why the order is not legal. If the president still does not back down, then there is no choice. Commanders must resign. The law prohibits them from carrying out illegal orders.

By issuing their statement, the Joint Chiefs have made it both privately and publicly clear what is at stake. But what is unsettling is that nobody knows if the President is listening.”

 

11. Pentagon’s $2 Billion Cybersecurity Project Slowed by Flaws

Bloomberg · by Anthony Capaccio · January 13, 2021

This has to be a top priority.  We have to get this right.

 

12. Think tank pitch to Biden: Broker a NATO bank to finance new weapons

Defense News · by Sebastian Sprenger · January 13, 2021

Excerpt:

“A dedicated NATO bank could also help stabilize defense investments throughout all member states, including dual-use, civilian transportation infrastructure projects, amid the economic downturn of the coronavirus pandemic, the report states.

The authors pitch London as the headquarters for their bank idea. “With tensions between the United Kingdom and other EU NATO members growing from Brexit, and concerns that this could impact the security relationship, placing a NATO bank in London could help reaffirm the United Kingdom’s commitment to NATO and European security,” they argue.”

 

13. The Pentagon Must Learn to Do More With Less

Bloomberg · by Editorial Board · January 14, 2021

The four worst words in national security and defense: "Do more with less."  The fact is we will end up doing less with less.  But let's focus on doing what is right and necessary with whatever resources Congress provides and the CINC directs.

 

14. Investigators pursuing signs US Capitol riot was planned

CNN · by Evan Perez

If there was any complicity among congressmen or other government officials it is going to cause tremendous problems. 

 

15. Sharpening America’s "Swiss Army Knife": Lessons from the Army National Guard’s COVID-19 Response

mwi.usma.edu · by Laura Keenan · January 14, 2021

I imagine LTC Keenan is decisively engaged in DC today since she is a member of the DC National Guard.

 

16.  Upset by veterans who stormed the Capitol, these vets decided to clean up trash the mob left on the streets of D.C.

The Washington Post · by Sydney Page · January 14, 2021

Good for these veterans.  Doing the right thing.

 

17.  The online far right is moving underground

Axios · by Kyle Daly and Sara Fischer

This is going to be a problem.  We should allow them to operate in plain site.

 

18.  How the Army's 'Robin Sage' puts Special Forces hopefuls to a final, make-or-break test in the forests of North Carolina

Business Insider · by Stavros Atlamazoglou

 

--------------

 

“Everybody feels the evil, but no one has courage or energy enough to seek the cure.” 

- Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America

 

“Efforts and courage are not enough without purpose and direction.”

“The one unchangeable certainty is that nothing is unchangeable or certain.”

-John F. Kennedy

 

"To sit home, read one's favorite paper, and scoff at the misdeeds of the men who do things is easy, but it is markedly ineffective. It is what evil men count upon the good men's doing."

- Teddy Roosevelt

 

01/14/2021 News & Commentary – Korea

Thu, 01/14/2021 - 10:03am

News & commentary by Dave Maxwell. Edited and published by Daniel Riggs.

1. FDD | Kim Jong Un Seeks to Bully Biden on the Diplomatic Stage

2. Kim Jong-un Uses Party Congress to Double Down on Nuclear Program

3. Kim Jong-un’s Shot Across Biden’s Bow

4. James Carafano: North Korea could spell trouble for Biden - here’s what he needs to do

5. An Incremental Approach to the DPRK

6, Kim Yo Jong Steals the Spotlight at Big Brother’s Coronation

7. Time to shift focus on arms control with North Korea: experts

8. What to Expect from a Neglected North Korea: Starting Small

9. Top court upholds 20-year prison term for ex-President Park

10. South's missiles are keeping up with North's

11. Kim Yo Jong slams S. Korea with harsh comments

12. Seoul is in a dilemma between inter-Korean relations and OPCON transfer

13. Musan County residents asked to provide their best winter clothes to soldiers (north Korea)

14. At least 30 suspected COVID-19 cases emerge after New Year's performance (north Korea)

15. Kim promotes self, demotes sister in Pyongyang power puzzle

16. Iran spurns South Korea request for release of tanker after meetings

17. South Korea Working on $360,000 Video Room for North Korea Talks

18. North Korea continues to erect disease control stations at local markets, police stations

19. Is North Korea finally getting 4G?

 

1. FDD | Kim Jong Un Seeks to Bully Biden on the Diplomatic Stage

fdd.org · by David Maxwell Senior Fellow · January 13, 2021

The latest analysis from my colleague Mathew Ha and me.

 

2. Kim Jong-un Uses Party Congress to Double Down on Nuclear Program

The New York Times · by Choe Sang-Hun · January 13, 2021

My comments in the article.

 

3. Kim Jong-un’s Shot Across Biden’s Bow

defenseone.com · by Bruce Klingner

Excerpts:

“In the meantime, Biden should maintain America’s strong alliance with South Korea, explore missile defense options for the U.S. and its allies, and respond firmly to any violations of UN resolutions. The U.S. did not respond to any of North Korea’s missile violations in 2019 and 2020.

Kim Jong-un has signaled that he has no intention of treating the new U.S. president any better than his predecessors. As Pyongyang tries to force its way higher on Biden’s foreign policy agenda, it will continue to augment its ability to threaten the United States, South Korea, and Japan with nuclear weapons. Last year was relatively quiet in U.S.-North Korean relations. That is likely to change.”

 

4. James Carafano: North Korea could spell trouble for Biden - here’s what he needs to do

foxnews.com · by James Jay Carafano | Fox News

Yes, we all assume Kim will test the new Biden administration with some kind of threat, increased tension, or provocation to conduct his blackmail diplomacy In discussing Kim's possible courses of action one thing a good friend pointed out to me recently is that because of COVID Kim may not want to drive negotiations at this time.  He must know that he is certainly not going to have a summit with anyone because of the COVID threat and it is likely that working level negotiations are too dangerous because it could become a spreader event.  Therefore, we have to consider what would be the objective of a provocation?  What would be Kim's objective if not to try to bring the US to the negotiating table to make concessions and provide sanctions relief?  Therefore, because of COVID we may see Kim have a strategic patience stance at least in the near term while COVID is such a threat.

As an aside, since face to face meetings are unlikely perhaps we should offer working level talks via Zoom.  Perhaps we could establish a routine electronic channel among working level negotiators.  Make something useful come from COVID.

 

5. An Incremental Approach to the DPRK

realcleardefense.com · by Matt Abbott

An incremental approach has been the hallmark of almost every agreement and attempted policy from the Agreed Framework to the Perry Policy Proposal to the September 2005 to the Leap Day Agreement and even the Panmunjom Declaration and the Singapore summit agreement.  It is the conventional negotiating process.

However, progress is possible should Biden and his team make incremental, though steady, attempts to further reduce tensions while simultaneously building trust with the North Koreans. The new administration could prove successful in laying the groundwork for a fundamental shift over time in what has been a perennially acrimonious relationship. Unchanged from the analysis offered four decades ago, the direction of movement will matter more than the pace when ultimately resolving this conflict.

That said there will have to be some "incremental steps." One question is whether they will be small steps or "big bites."  Small steps support Kim's political warfare and long con. "Big bites" can force Kim to take substantive actions that actually can support actions that might lead to denuclearization or at least reduce capabilities and threats to some degree.  But we must make the correct assumptions about the nature and strategy of the Kim family regime before we devise and execute a new strategy.

 

6. Kim Yo Jong Steals the Spotlight at Big Brother’s Coronation

The Daily Beast· by Donald Kirk · January 13, 2021

There should be no doubt that she remains powerful and in the good graces of KJU.  She is one of the very, if not only, people whom KJU trusts.

 

7. Time to shift focus on arms control with North Korea: experts

The Korea Times · January 14, 2021

Of course, this is what KJU has long wanted.  In his mind (and in nK propaganda) this will put nK on an "equal footing" with the US.  For those who advocate arms control talks what concessions are we willing to make as part of arms control talks?  How many nuclear weapons are we willing to give up? Are we going to sacrifice extended deterrence and our nuclear umbrella over the ROK and Japan?  Will we be willing to reduce missile defenses in Korea and Japan?  Certainly, these are just some of the demands that KJU will be making as part of arms control talks.

We should assume that arms control talks supports KJU's political warfare strategy and long con.  We should only adopt this approach if we are ready to execute a superior political warfare strategy that focuses on achieving objectives beyond denuclearization: an acceptable durable political arrangement in Northeast Asia that will serve, protect, and advance US and ROK.US alliance interests.

 

 8. What to Expect from a Neglected North Korea: Starting Small

19fortyfive.com · by ByEli Fuhrman · January 13, 2021

Yes, you eat an elephant one bite at a time.

However, I would not count on China to rein in north Korea.

Conclusion: "Even if Kim should feel compelled to action in an effort to refocus U.S. attention on North Korea, it is unlikely that he will do so with a highly-escalatory action such as an ICBM test. Indeed, Kim’s command of the tools at his disposal and his skill in calibrating provocative actions – as well as his understanding of the risks involved with escalating tensions with the United States – means he is far more likely to test and probe the limits of the new administration’s patience rather than jumping right into another saga of fire-and-fury. This will only be reinforced by the importance of North Korea’s relationship with China, which will serve as a brake on any overly escalatory behavior. It will also be important to consider that provocations by North Korea may not be solely motivated by a desire to attract attention from the United States, but may also be the result of Kim’s efforts to shore up domestic support and legitimacy; in such a case, risking war with the United States may not prove necessary. Rather than expecting a major demonstration from the off, policymakers should prepare themselves for a smaller-scale, and gradually escalating, set of North Korean actions."

Since this webpage will not format please go to his link to read the entire essay.  

 

9. Top court upholds 20-year prison term for ex-President Park

en.yna.co.kr · by 우재연 · January 14, 2021

This is a sad and tragic event in Korean history. Many Koreans I know do not believe that the impeachment, charges, and trial were in any way justified. They feel it was a coup engineered by the current ruling party.

 

10. South's missiles are keeping up with North's

koreajoongangdaily.joins.com· by Shim Kyu-Seok

I think the reporter is confused here.  I do not think Hyunmoo 2B is derived form the Russian Isaknder or perhaps I am misreading this excerpt.

Excerpts:

The Hyunmoo-2B, fully deployed in 2015 as a surface-to-surface missile, is a short- to medium-range ballistic missile believed to be derived from the Russian-made Iskander missile.

Its conversion into an SLBM is notable given that a missile tested by North Korea in a series of high-profile launches in 2019 resembled the Iskander. Named KN-23 by the U.S. Department of Defense, the missile is believed to have a similar range to the Hyunmoo-2B at around 450 to 700 meters (1,476 to 2,297 feet).”

 

11. Kim Yo Jong slams S. Korea with harsh comments

donga.com· January 14, 2021

Her bad cop comments are quite entertaining.

Excerpt: 

“If the North refuses to talk and strengthens nuclear power, the only way to respond is strategic patience, which means even stricter sanctions. North Korea should be willing to talk first before the Biden administration has enough. Harsh comments will only make future dialogues more difficult. The North should stop reducing its own window of opportunities.

Strategic patience is not the way ahead. A long-term approach to solving the Korea question is the only way to end the nuclear threat and the human rights abuses and crimes against humanity.”

 

12. Seoul is in a dilemma between inter-Korean relations and OPCON transfer

donga.com· January 14, 2021

We need to get this right.  This has the potential to do significant damage to the alliance if we do not.  First, we need both the ROK and US to recommit to a conditions based approach with a further commitment that we will execute the transition as expeditiously as possible by meeting the conditions.  Second, we need an effective information program to explain the OPCON transition process, why it is so important to the interests of both countries, and sufficient transparency illustrating the progress toward the completion of transition.  Third, we need to get on with business to make this happen.  Fourth, we have to do all this while maintaining the highest state of readiness to deter the north, sustain the ability to defend the South and defeat the nKPA, and to be able to react to any of the contingencies in the north to include internal instability and potential regime collapse.

 

13. Musan County residents asked to provide their best winter clothes to soldiers (north Korea)

dailynk.com· by Lee Chae Un · January 14, 2021

Yes, this is an indicator of the poor state of the nKPA as well as the demands made on the Korean people in the north that certainly undermines the legitimacy of the regime and could lead to low-level resistance that could spread once the suppression mechanisms are sufficiently weakened.  And if the military loses coherency and support for the regime all bets are off.

 

14. At least 30 suspected COVID-19 cases emerge after New Year's performance (north Korea)

dailynk.com · by Ha Yoon Ah · January 14, 2021

Will this prove to have been a super spreader event? In addition, not to beat the horse too dead -are we ready to see a significant outbreak in the north that could impact the military as well as the elite and general population?

 

15. Kim promotes self, demotes sister in Pyongyang power puzzle

asiatimes.com · by Andrew Salmon · January 13, 2021

I do not think Kim Yo-jong has been really "demoted."

But I do agree this buried lede is important:

Experts suggest that a less visible and more important reshuffle was the removal of economic czar Pak Bong Ju from the party’s Executive Committee.

Given that Pak was the key individual behind North Korea’s marketization over the last decade, and given the heavy verbiage paid in the Congress toward “self-sufficiency” – essentially, a pivot away from Chinese imports – this suggests Pyongyang is turning the economic clock backward to a more centrally controlled model.

Market activities are a threat to the regime. In addition, we are unlikely to see any kind of "Chinese-style economic reforms" that people have longed for as the solution to the regime's economic failures.

 

16. Iran spurns South Korea request for release of tanker after meetings

upi.com· by Elizabeth Shim · January 13, 2021

 

17.  South Korea Working on $360,000 Video Room for North Korea Talks

The National Interest · by Stephen Silver · January 13, 2021

Perhaps this could be used for working level talks between north and South as well.

 

18. North Korea continues to erect disease control stations at local markets, police stations

dailynk.com· by Lee Chae Un · January 13, 2021

Another indicator of possible COVID outbreaks in north Korea.

 

19. Is North Korea finally getting 4G?

northkoreatech.org · by Martyn Williams · January 13, 2021

Can we exploit this for a number of purposes to include for information and influence activities?

--------------

 

“Everybody feels the evil, but no one has courage or energy enough to seek the cure.” 

- Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America

 

“Efforts and courage are not enough without purpose and direction.”

“The one unchangeable certainty is that nothing is unchangeable or certain.”

-John F. Kennedy

 

"To sit home, read one's favorite paper, and scoff at the misdeeds of the men who do things is easy, but it is markedly ineffective. It is what evil men count upon the good men's doing."

- Teddy Roosevelt